Ion-Engine Spacecraft On Moon Mission 43
anactofgod writes "The Times On-line and space.com reports that the European Space Agencies Smart-1 probe has cleared the Lagrangian point between the Earth and its moon and is due to enter lunar orbit on Nov 15th. Smart-1's mission is to make observations related to the moon's formation and composition.
What's cool about this mission, other than this is the first European mission to Earth's moon, is that the probe is using solar powered ion engine thrusters. Ion engines are an order of magnitude more efficient than chemical engines. NASA flew the first ion-powered spacecraft, Deep Space 1, in 1998. Smart-1 is the second spacecraft to use the technology, and was designed as a testbed for future ESA missions. The ESA is scheduled to fly the ion-powered BepiColombo on a mission to Mercury in 2009."
Re:Better description (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Better description (Score:5, Informative)
Not quite -- it also includes the "centrifugal" pseudoforce. The Lagrangian points are fixed points within the rotating reference frame of the Earth/Moon system. Because the frame rotates, it is not an inertial frame, so pseudoforces contribute. If the Earth and Moon were held in place magically, instead of orbiting each other, the balance point between us would be in a different location than it is when the system rotates.
Also, of course, there are five Lagrangian points, only one of which is physically between the Earth and Moon. If only gravity mattered, it would be the only one. The other four arise thanks to the contribution of pseudoforces.
Re:Better description (Score:5, Informative)
As I seem to recall, there are a group of asteroids in the L4 and L5 points (with regards to the Sun and Jupiter) called the Trojan Asteroids. Not shure that this is relevent, but the factoid just popped into my head.
Re:Better description (Score:5, Informative)
Sometimes, the L4 and L5 Lagrange points of a system are called Trojan points.
This site mentions how the prominent asteroids at the Trojan points are named after characters from the Iliad. One group is named after Greeks, the other after Trojans. Each group also has a "spy" in its midst. [thefreedictionary.com]
Re:Better description (Score:1)
Such crafts would not need to orbit the sun and you could put them almost anywhere. In fact, you co
Re:Better description (Score:2)
Not "spartan." "Trojan."
But before that comes... (Score:2)
Nuclear Thermal vs. Ion Thruster designs (Score:4, Interesting)
Obviously, if you're headed inbound into the solar system, you're destined for more light therefore more available energy. And, going outbound (Pluto-wise), sunlight gets scarce. So, where is the breakeven? Solar panels cost weight, and Ion engines mass a lot for the miniscule thrust they generate. Nuclear thermal (or Nuclear/Ion) combinations also mass a lot but have the added advantage of much higher available thrusts for short bursts if needed.
What about pairing Nuclear thermal with Ion thrusting? Generate a plasma by heating it with a slow fission or plutonium decay reaction, and also generate electricity from the waste heat. Use the electric power to do microwave heating. Or, directly accelerate the plasma ions using a magneto-hydrodynamic MHD setup?
Is anyone actually actively developing anything like this? It seems to me that the fundamental limitations of our current space delivery systems are NOT who can build a better mousetrap, but that all the mousetraps are using cheese (LH2+LOX) instead of peanut butter (NTR, MHD, Ion engines, etc.).
Also, are there any somewhat-better-than-rumors of USAF designs using these that are flying but that people can't talk about?
Nuclear rockets (Score:2)
It seems like such a logical design change that I am sure it has been considered. It would totally kill the level of complexity though, which may be enough to kick it out of practicality regardless.
Cool stuf
Re:Nuclear rockets (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem all nuclear powered designs have is the fact that they are nuclear powered. It's hard to convince J. Q. Public that it's okay to launch any kind of nuclear reactor design into space, especially when said material is being launched via highly combustible chemical rockets. No one would want to be in charge of the cost-benefit of making the design and launch decisions the first time a launch like that goes bad.
Re:Nuclear rockets (Score:1)
Re:Nuclear Thermal vs. Ion Thruster designs (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Nuclear Thermal vs. Ion Thruster designs (Score:3, Interesting)
You can in principle build a magnetically confined nuclear thermal drive that holds a uranium plasma in a magnetic field and reaches very high temperatures, but this turns out to have many pr
Re:Nuclear Thermal vs. Ion Thruster designs (Score:3, Interesting)
Interesting ... (Score:2)
Does anyone have any info on the relative activities/funding of NASA vs ESA?
It's super cool that they're experimenting with newer propulsions sytems and the like.
Re:Interesting ... (Score:2)
Re:Interesting ... (Score:2)
No offense, but you are indeed suffering from misperception. NASA's Deep Space 1 used ion propulsion 6 years ago. NASA's Lunar Prospector orbited the Moon, also 6 years ago, and before that in modern lunar probe history there was Clementine, from the US, but not NASA. And don't forget the current missions-- Stardust comet sample return mission, the M
Re:Interesting ... (Score:2)
A fisking of TFA (Score:5, Informative)
Why newspapers publish drivel like this, I'll never know. If it was hard to get right you wouldn't have amateurs fisking this stuff on Slashdot!
Re:A fisking of TFA (Score:2)
The most irritating thing about this is to see a NASA article full of sensible units mN, kW and the like, and then report Isp in "seconds", a dimensionally incorrect anachronism from the days when men were men and pounds was the name for both a unit of mass and a unit of force.
Could we please start reporting Isp in N*s/kg?
--Tom
Ion powered? (Score:2)
Earlier slashdot article about this (Score:2)
Too Damn Slow! (Score:2)
We need propulsion technology that moves bigger things faster, not smaller things slower.
Re:Too Damn Slow! (Score:2)
Re:Too Damn Slow! (Score:2)
No, we need to send bigger things further. Ion engines are good for that.
Elapsed time is hardly very important, unless you build your space probes from fragile components with very short working lives. The moon will still be there if your probe takes 10 years to get there, let alone one.
Re:Too Damn Slow! (Score:2)
The whole point of space exploration is to put people there, not treat it as some curiosity to be explored at great leisure with research probes. The speed we can travel in space needs to increase for the same reasons we work so hard to increase the speed of travel on Earth.
Re:Too Damn Slow! (Score:2)
Says who?
People are the most obvious example of fragile components with short working lives which therefore should not be used in space exploration.
Even if you think the only reason for interest in the rest of the universe is to eventually send people (a rather bizzare POV implying a remarkable lack of curiosity), clearly we're well below the level of technology and knowledge at which it makes sense to do that now. Does that mean all space exp
Re:Too Damn Slow! (Score:2)
Curiosity had everything to do with it, but it is a curiosity that can't be satisfied with machines. The purpose of using automated probes is to learn, and the primary reason to learn about a new place is to enable people to travel to that place. If I want to live in a different country, that desire can't be
Re:Too Damn Slow! (Score:2)
And they've been hiding this technology inthe same hanger as the ever lasting lightbulb and the car which runs on water?
[...]the Europeans decide to stay in Europe until they invented air conditioning
More to the point is the fact that they didn't set out into the atlantic until they had invented the boat.
Current state of the art in manned space travel is to either:
Re:Too Damn Slow! (Score:2)
As for you "crossing the Atlantic" schtick, are you arguing that Prince Henry and Columbus should have waited until they had the technology to build the Queen Mary, rather than go exploring with little w
Re:Too Damn Slow! (Score:2)
Er, yes, I pointed out how far from a workable technology that was.
Yes, if we had continued to work forward from there we might have a level of technology to do real earth-moon travel to support an outpost there by now, but the point is that we don't. The USSR moved to learning enough about themedical problems to try for an apollo-style publicity stunt to mars. The USA more or less gave up on manned space exploration, just sending men
Re:Too Damn Slow! (Score:2)
If we had the possessed the will, we co
Re:Too Damn Slow! (Score:2)
In the sense that the Wright Flyer was not a real method of air travel. It was a point from which development could begin, but no one was going to start scheduled passenger or freight services using that technology.
You also apparently agree that we had the capability to stay on the Moon, but only failed to do so
No, I said we might have had by now -- ie we were 30 years development away from that point. We are perhaps 20 years away now -- d
Re:Too Damn Slow! (Score:2)
One, you seem to be arguing that the Wrights should not have flown because 1903 technology wasn't capable of supporting scheduled service. Two, the ability to operate scheduled passenger/freight service is not a prerequisite for human space exploration.
Technology will not develop by itself; it doe
Re:Too Damn Slow! (Score:2)
Er, no, I was saying that no one should have tried to set up a scheduled friegt service using clones of the Wright Flyer.
if you are saying we lacked the technology in the 1970's to establish a permanent human presence on the Moon, and to conduct a human mission to Mars in the 1980's, I fundamentally disagree.
Are you imagining creating and supplying a moonbase with a
Re:Too Damn Slow! (Score:2)
More to the point, no one would have been able to set up a scheduled freight service without the Wright Flyer's existence. The technology to sustain that service would not have otherwise developed. As I said, technological progress is not a steady-state exercise. The reason that we developed the infrastucture and technolgy that allowed scheduled air service is that the Wrights, and their successor
More info (Score:1)
My mistake (Score:1)